Thank you very much for your question.
With regard to the Peru-U.S. free trade agreement, it is already in force. Obviously the matter of 1090 and 1064—these have been suspended. Tomorrow there will be full derogation. We have talked with the American government about this situation, and the American government has been very understanding.
We want a certain amount of time to occur so that the commission, which is made up of 19 members, four of which are representatives of the government, five are the heads of the Amazon regional areas, and ten are representatives of the rural communities.... We want them to provide the pertinent recommendations, and then based on these recommendations we will put forward a new law that will take into account the concerns of the native communities and will protect their rights. So the reconciliation process, as you call it, is already under way. It is simply a matter of time—the time required to resolve the issue.
I would also like to note that in prior conversation, the representatives of the different rural ethnic groups were represented by one entity. While it was sizeable, it did not represent all native groups. It was called AIDESEP. When the government decided to increase dialogue, we wanted to include other ethnic groups that were not members of AIDESEP, so now there will be ten members, and AIDESEP will not represent the majority.
As I said, Peru is a very big country, and the native people of the south are not necessarily the same as the aboriginal people of the Amazon area or the northern area. Their needs may be different. They may have common interests, but they may have specific interests. So the idea is that this dialogue include representation by all groups, by all native communities in Peru.